How many Eastern Europeans enjoy dual citizenship with Russia? Will recent events in Georgia affect the number of pass-ports in other nations that border Russia? The conclusion of this article at Window On Eurasia.
Window on Eurasia: Moscow’s Use of Russian Passports in Georgia Disturbs Other Post-Soviet States.
“..With Russia’s actions in Georgia, Moscow has invoked a principle which has not yet been accepted by the international community or even by the Russian government as a universal precedent has been created that suggests a country has the right to intervene in a territory on which “compactly live” its dual citizens.
Many countries, such as Ukraine, prohibit dual citizenship either in their constitutions or by law because their governments fear that the most dangerous situation would be to have a large number of people on their territories who sometimes could act as citizens of their country and sometimes as citizens of another. And that danger only increases, Mesherova continues, when one country secretly or semi-secretly passes out passports as the Russians did in Abkhazia and South Ossetia and reportedly are doing so in Crimea as well despite the laws of the country in which Russian officials are acting in this way…”
The obvious reaction by Western Powers would be to monitor the traffic and distribution of Passports in nations neighboring Russia.
It will be interesting to read the U.S. reaction to the International Court of Justice findings on both the ethnic cleansing charges and the soveignity issues presented by Georgia against Russia. Pres. Bush has declined to sign the treaties that would acknowledge the Courts authority.
The Georgia Minister of Foreign Affairs blogs via an internet provider in the U.S. currently, due to hostile cyber activity in Georgia. The following quote is from that blog.
Monday, September 8, 2008
Hearing to focus on Georgia’s request for provisional measures by the Court to prevent further cases of ethnic cleansing following the Russian invasion of Georgia
The International Court of Justice will hear arguments on Monday, September 8, in the case Georgia has brought against the Russian Federation for ethnic cleansing and for its support of separatism on Georgian territory. The charges relate to instances of ethnic cleansing beginning in the early 1990s and through recent days.
Other nations in the Caucus region will be watching closely, certainly Armenia has great concern. Armenia recently hosted a foot-ball game with a team from Turkey. The obvious hope is that sports will provide an opening for further diplomatic progress. Ethnic Cleansing ( Genocide ) has been a stumbling block for repairing relations between those two nations. As it stands, Armenia is effectively trapped between a war and a closed border with Turkey.
The Ukraine is also in turmoil, being at odds with Russia and fearing the same military adventures may come to their nation.
The U.S. is currently reconsidering the standing relationship with Russia, a major concern being nuclear issues. As the election nears in America, the world will have one eye on the International Court of Justice, and the other eye on the Election.
Will the Court come to any conclusion before the inauguration of the new President, or will they wait, hoping for a President that is more supportive of it’s authority? George Bush scuttled the previous administrations efforts to establish the Court.
Last October, I notice an old pump
September 7, 2008
Last October, I notice an old pump, in a neighbor’s backyard. The memories flowed from my memory well. Cool memories of water on the hot days of my youth on the farm. Hot years, no rain for months. Dust, and more dust, on and in and around everything.
But the well never went dry. The red pump, on a cool well that stood at the center of our lives in the dry years. The hard years. Years before water was sold in disposable plastic bottles that could make dust shine. Before vending machines, microwave ovens, and other means of instant gratification. I don’t trust those little plastic bottles.
Cool water, on my bare feet. It don’t get no cooler than that in a dust-bowl…
The Ant and the Elephant
September 7, 2008
Dreaming of Utipia
Many of the people I meet on the internet are self-proclaimed socialists. Not that they bare any resemblance to socialists of five or six decades ago. Today’s egalitarians are much more pro-active than their predecessors, and much less prone to violence ( violence of their own commision ). Dreamers, not doers.
One common fantasy among these neo-Leninists is the myth of ‘Mother Russia’, and I wonder if their love for the myth is inappropriate to the point of humor. Consider;
The Ant and the Elephant
An ant was strolling across a wheat field ( Perhaps I shouldn’t say strolling. To an ant, the blades of wheat must look like tall Canadian Pines ). He found a very sad ant. It would seem that the latter ant had fallen in love with an Elephant ( The sad part is; the Elephant had died before the wedding ).
“Why so sad, comrade? Your love was monumental, and your name will be known world-wide!”
No words can console a despondent lover, who realizes that digging a grave will take the rest of his life…
Russia, like the Elephant is dying, if she is not dead already. Held down by the weight of her own corpse, she cannot rise to consumate the love of the sentimental left. It would be humorous if it were not so sad to see the Castros, and the Chaves of the world pledging their undying love to a dead dream.
Pismires and Politics ‘08
Chrome is Heavy
September 6, 2008
Google’s Gambit
Most people use Microsoft’s Browser ( about 70% ), yet MS makes no revenue directly from that usage. Google sells advertisement that is viewed mostly on Microsoft Browsers. What would Microsoft lose, if they blocked all advertisement with their browser? Nothing. What would Google lose? Everything. Chrome is a heavy risk.
Whether it ever happens or not, Google must develop their own browser, and it better be competitive with the other browsers out there. It doesn’t have to be perfect, just survivable.
Chrome, in it’s current state doesn’t threaten any of the several major browsers, but it’s obviously fast, accurate and at least as reliable as the others. Add the fact that it’s in Beta, and welcoming criticism and suggestion and you have a formula for growth.
I’m not going to add another techy review, there’s a link in the side-bar with much of that. I will add a link to Chrome for those who are interested in downloading.
p.s. Is it obvious that I like Chrome? Chrome’s quality is self-evident.